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1. Plains,Prairie,and Rocky Mountains Plains Culture Area
II
2. Basic Types of Plains Cultures Prior to re-introduction of the horse:
Two basic types
Foot hunters
Valley horticulturalists – also hunting
After re-introduction of the horse:
Three basic types
Aboriginal hunters
Hunters with farming origins
Farmers with farming origins
3. Aboriginal Hunters
4. Farmers With Farming Origins Sedentary Villagers
Earthlodges
Crops
Maize, beans, squash,
sunflowers, tobacco
Summer hunts
Specific subgroups
Trade centers
tribes from entire region
LaVerendrye (1738)
noted Mandan trade centers
Matrilineal
Stratified
upper class and commoners
5. Hunters With Farming Origins
6. Rocky Mountains Temporary use
Basin, Plateau, Plains
Permanent residents
ie: “Sheepeater” Shoshone (Tukadika)
Adaptations to high mountain ranges
Modifications made pre-horse
Maintained ties to earlier economies
Major groups:
Shoshone
Ute
Crow
7. Ownership of resources
Communal to individual
Gender roles
More dependence
Strict gender division
Berdache and Manly Hearted Woman
Status system
Status outside of kinship group
Aboriginal hunter groups move away from egalitarian
Sodalities for both men and women
Mixture of Individualism and Cooperative Ideals Social Changes
8. Warfare Honor and status
Bravery
Hunting grounds
9. Social and individual rituals
Balance and bounty
Personal quest
Medicine bundles
Individually owned
Calumet
Peace
Sharing
Responsibility
Blended
Sun Dance
Summer ceremony
Community and personal thanks Religion
10. Sweat Lodge Recent resurgence
11.
Origin in Great Basin
Indian and Buffalo “Return”
Whites and Disease “Retreat”
Wounded Knee
Desperate Prayers
Fear and Arrogance Ghost Dance